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NOY | HORI "AU HL “unled Ooyepe,4 :s1s0n; MAOW SUV OLE JE WMO Tf BAY “phy Agpoay ayyso> Q1YHOM ALIvad "JO}00J1D_ Wilh SAV AddVH (Cy's'n‘pouondes -paso1d) “sUMOD bib S poow Seno ‘eres s85UH9HO _wNE, oe iv AVaNOW ‘SMaN5GS! bestia et uae a seams Er) iv (e204 39D) 1861 ‘Zi ‘Bny.‘Aopseupem 04 yBnosys 9 “ny ‘Aopsanys 1861 ‘Zt “Bry ‘Aopeoupssy 04 yBnosys 9 ‘Bay ‘ADpsinys (osey ind) (Cut here) Thursday, Aug. 6 through to Wednesday, Aug. 12, 1981 (Cuthere) Thursday, Aug. 6 through to Wednesday, Aug. 12, 1981 bite) "Yooedey end Weanordey MAGNUM, P.I. es / Sra Castle Realty Ltd. We'll cover it all..or sou. 365-3336 in Anne Lockhart, seen here with title SERED wen, HUCK AND: vou! 7:00 MORNING SHOW geo MORNING Ferrer and hi hart also guest stars along with Jose Mig Magnum shred by Rober Caine ose Ferren, a pro nominee for roposed the U.S. Supreme Court, to find Diane Westmore (June 3 ee ® KY este the eve of Pearl Harbor. All CBC programming is (EXC. Separ subject to change due to the at sikealt atthe, M. WEATHI A.) a request for money. Jeffersons (EXC THUR) 6:00 RED MAGNUM, Pt. Magnum “aie hired i ned fre. 3"su a, tortind uP aia the d.and 6:00 g@ CBS NEWS SNEWS Peart STUDIO SEE it; 60 mins. PROGRAMMING rogramming Is All subjoct 16 eh sue the zinke, pie the GBC. the shock of his its when & fudge tums down his EASY ‘Author, Hugh regis Cooking (WED.) ‘MID-MORNI i Host bara, (MON. TUE“ WED.) ey 8: cop” tavest ating AS THE WORLD RNS. INDY ate (oebavineed that the deathe of two ‘unleashed the officers. QIALING FOR gle ever ELECTRIC COMPANY Mork 4 that it would ime BOB MCLEAN Baier Who are tn fall Beta ‘VOYAGE OF DARWIN ‘Approach Shot. Spin 1 Service "Reto in ‘Coach BEaney waren — n agitated woman with 20) RAMMING. AUNTIE a homemade pressure: PRocrammand U8 TEXAS. y contends with her Insecure, and _ hostile ind, ore the Custody ‘ot inal ‘aren FLECTIONS trapped in'the middie of Leo And Me (FAI.) ihelr feud. , the woman ‘and married in Honolulu on rated when the Japanese at- tacked, Caine has believed Diane dead Until he receives a telegram signed by ne S OMPANY her, folowed by a blackmail threat and PORTS: THE OF THE UNITED STATES: ABC NEWS: JHTLINE Anchored by — Ted 2 ie TONIGHT SHOW . Guest: Erma Bombeck. £ Qing) CAPTIONED RETURN OF THE how ne Roman Touch’ Oficials toa Herons ieee to 1209 Veous" 4 “ea Dan ‘Batley BS relist: "scar TOMORROW COAST- ngland, rectuated clash belween 42:90 the Viking nordes_and fred the Great 8, this episode ring Viking raids on 6d, U.S.A, BE ANNOUI LAN! Guests: The Marshall Fucker Band. (00 mins, 1 Mur. phy. Pete Duel, two men arg fairly, successful at 8 art of banditry until leennology ins to Cat ENATIO make oer re aieeranle, for GIy RATIONAL 6:30 OPS TS GROCETERIA & LAUNDROMAT & SHAKE SHOPPE We Are Open 364 Days a Year g) tingne Letterheads, & Envelopes . ness. s . hures Business Forms Any Printing! Monday - $ day - Saturday 8:30 - 10:30 p.m. Sunday & Holidays 9- 10:30 p.m. CASTLEGAR NEWS 1038 Columbia 197 Columbia, 365-7266 365-6534 y, = i. CBC ramming is pact teanange due (o ihe strike atthe Bovenersy uest: Actress ait Walker. Host: Downs. ‘CAVETT SHOW fuests: Federico Feillint ind ‘Marcello Mastroianni. Partit. WALTER KITE’ S UNIVERSE A_GBS News Magazine eertes ‘anchored by CBS: Bullet inh ‘he scone, hee a im-witted coun sheritl WI fingers pointe as only to be Senta sed ers di goons of the inci aihing 2 ia oe «ie sitively ma seed REALTY WORLD. Castle Realty Ltd. Well eover it all, 4365-3336 stor vou. & THE SEEDING OF SARAH BURNS ie, Lenz as Sarah Bums, with Ma. in Balsam, her doct oi li DeYoung. as ier boytiend Seeding of Sarat focuses lied He the ‘death ofa facehorse ina embyp transplant in who, leaming h Burns. al ‘on Sarah Burs, 2 The film vill, independent young working of 2 proposed ‘which would, be a scientific milestone, volunteers for the Bregnancy to. term, deliberation, 01 (Balsam) accepts. Sarah as the explores the Pioneering volunt Incest, bi) ata oar oid "sister, feel ses Suerte Bn mo snes Barbara Waiters con- linues her interview with Katherine Hepbum and earlier ul Newman and Burt Reveoids, (0 mint Note Soeur toviea's ‘past ai Brough to ight when a runs" a account of tink. & ono. fuest: Victor Buono. (60 mins.) KE PROPHET TERS the strike at the: second interviews Bee ht twin Osta Fost" Hugh'™” powns: lost: Hugh Epi ent ir publisher the hiohty spiced life al the alred at this’ Hotel. (60 boy Connection’ (60 mins.) | FAMIt ae DICK CAVETT SHOW ut Goldman, LEAGUE 2 va Pitt, al est: BO screenwriter. MAJOR Montreal Ex te Programming _ will CAPTIONED _ ena udy Vallee, Ann Miller. tt etary zany’ orderly makes ilfe impossible in ae ty New ity hospital, ance and a new way Grito. flepoats Zhe.) = @B won foMonnow (opt, 60 mi mins moet angels atuntwonen and fy identi PEOPLE oo Ut the strike continues Brogramming | will ime. Giroda @hres, s0mins.) Ma Marnsne in order to help murderous Vengeance. (Repeat ming) Bbvislaee NATIONAL €:30 @9 THE FACTS | amen bea gt Irtin "Living Treasures of dea in this firat H stone PROGRAMMING 1 GEC py ramming is Subject to chan eve t to ORME BRODIE tet "Edinburgh" GARADA SUMMER Burnet tor ory Hg, OF Sah it the ‘strike Continues as at De Young Cansie Vaios, ammaing wil ‘A woman has an “Bs Hind 41:00 Shree at this time. er on the time comas tor Herta give.up ihe Baby 0 the couple who paid her, val pheavals 8 and” ojeen eee ea ec Immic rant beker, HT LIN Kens. bey teeaee ty Tas 8 JE be © wistory. Wee it sao HORROR) “'Mr, Sardonicus'* 1 Oscar “Homolie, | Ger Rolfe. With Two ire, Ray tian, Rosi a: 1230 Ae ‘i, er eo ‘Amotican’ Drag. Racin Gireutcahrs) © u PEERLESS DENTAL LAB - David Cowen’ ) and Relines by appointment become ‘lay jal ins =) Canadian Berllinairance Claim processed Dr.-Orval Burgner, D.M.0, 4. MacKay — Technicion East 7204 Sprague SPOKANE, Washington — (509) 928-9337 Tells industrial horror story VANCOUVER (CP) — A horror story of what indus- trial development can do to a tropical country was des- cribed at a conference last week by Malaysia’s leading environmentalist. Gurmit Singh told the 19th World Congress of the Inter- national Federation of Land- scape Architects that much of Malaysia's foresis have been cut down, its rivers’ polluted, its cities jammed with squat- ters and its Sorcaucrecy $e: come corrupt. Singh said future develop- ment must include environ-’ mental controls if ‘“‘social- economic justice is to be re- alized without a ruined tropi- cal frontier.” Singh is founder and presi- dent of the Environmental Protection Society of Mal- aysia. Malaysia has lost most of its lowland tropical forests this century to rubber and oil, palm plantations, he said. Sines ssid most ! Sings forests in pe peninsular “Malay Motorcycle museum All are SPRINGFIELD, MASS. (AP)—At the Indian Moto- cycle Museum, even the visi- tors’ ig -lot echoes the deep throb of America’s love affair with two- wheeled machines. It began here in 1901, when George Hendee, {national high-wheel. bicy Indians into the lighter bikes and then they got into trouble,’’ Man- thos said. ‘‘The foreign com- petition was too much for em.” ONLY HARLEY LEFT Of the 36 U.S. sia have been cut. He said , most rivers are polluted and silted, most large urban cen- tres are starting to suffer from air pollution, water sup- ply problems, floods and squatters. Roads, housing and industry are gobbling up prime agricultural land. Singh said a great deal of domestic sewage plus chem- ical fertilizer and runoff ends up in rivers. “The , wood-! ‘based indus- ties, various faciviles and mills that burn heavy fuel oil, quarries, and open burning of rubbish continue to pollute much of.the Malaysian’ air,”’ he said. ‘‘Many urban cen- tres are beginning ‘to suffer from haze and smog.” WILDLIFE REDUCED He said there is wide- spread destruction of man- grove swamps for land re- clamation, even though about 30 per cent of Malaysia's fish companies that competed with Indian in 1913, only Harl - tically reduced the wildlife champion, and sean Os- car Hedstrom of Brooklyn built the first motorcycle in the United States. é Leaving the ‘‘r’’ out, they started the Indian Motocycle Co. Within 12 years, it was, the largest motorcycle maker in the world, employing 3,000 at its teepee-shaped plant in downtown Springfield. Solid as trucks, several thousand of the chunky bikes ~ are still on the road almost 30 years after the last one was built, says Charles Manthos, @ retired metallurgist who opened the museum 10 years ago. In 1905, New York City put its bicycle patrolmen on spec- ial-model Indians and the motorcycle cop was born. For almost 50 years, New York police and hundreds of-other law officers rode the big ma- chines with special. bullet-proof windscreens. The last Indian Motocycle was built in 1953. The com- pany went under because it abandoned the big machines, epitomized by the 225-kilo- gram Chief, that had come to characterize U.S. motorcy- cles. “Near the end, they went y But the mystique. of two- wheel power endures. A’ recent rally at the mu- seum attracted more than 3,000: — an unlikely mix of tattooed bikers in chain belts swapping tales with elderly’ women, college students and retired engineers. : “I’ve ridden motorcycles since I was a kid, but don’t has ridden since 1950. ‘‘I love them. My son ‘thas one, too.” Paul Pierce, a felired auto worker from Oxford, brought three of the Me or 14"’ Indians he has in his garage. ‘‘Whenever I find one, I just have to fix it up,”” he said. “I love them.” As the crowd dwindled, Louise Scherbyn of Waterloo, N.Y., a slight woman in her late 70s in a neat pantsuit and tight curls, sneaked inside for a last, loving peek at the snow-white 1940 Scout she gave to the museum in 1960. “My arthritis got too bad for me to ride any more,’’ she explained. —— AHEARING AID | THROUGH THE WC.B.. Representatives of the Workers’ Compensation. Board Hearing Branch will be at the W.C.B. Area Office, 327 Baker Street, on Wednesday, August.12, 1981 from 8:30 a.m. to 1:00 p.m. to provide counselling and service a fe persons with hearing aids ok Compensation Board. It will be necessary to telophane the Area Office at 352-2291 to make an Sameera WORKERS’ SAS heel oes Explaining the causes of these problems, he said Mal- effect of oil and gas devel- opment on the Arctic environ- ment. PROJECT TO BEGIN Dr. Red Clarke, ical Ina candlelit 1g at the Church of God in Cas- tlogar, two local families were united when Sherry Anne Molnar, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Michael Mol- nar, became the bride of Mare Edward Ch full-length dress of 8 sea green polyester, its empire waist- line tied at the back. Her cor- sage was comprised of yellow sweetheart roses, The blue and white wed- ding theme colors were used in the at the Cas- son of Mr. and Mrs. John Nick Chernenkoff. Pastor Ira Johnson heard the marriage vows at an altar setting of pink white carnations in baskets and stately candelabrums. Guest pews were decorated with green fern and blue ribbons. Traditional wedding music was provided by organist Mrs. Hostetter. Given in marriage by her father, the bride wore a gown with a fitted bodice and full skirt which swept into a train. Daisy appliques cen- tred with séed pearls en- hanced the boeos and full sheer sleeves and lace trim- mel the Tomine? ‘ot her skirt and edged the train. Adainty pearl tiera _sec- ured her double veil, Com- pleting her ensemble was a pearl necklace and earrings, borrowed from her mother. The bride carried a Windsor’ bouquet consisting of 18 red: roses, white carnations and green fern. As well, she held. an 80-year-old: hand bible, printed in Yugoslavian, which had been given to her by her Mrs. adviser to the fish habitat section of the federal fish- ‘eries department in Winni- peg, said a pilot project to test the feasibility of natural gas production in the Arctic Islands will go into produc- tion in 1985 with transpor- tation by pipeline and tanker. in ihe Boaufori Sea pian for hydrocarbon production, 18 wells have been drilled from artificial islands and 12 more from. drill ships. Reserves in the area are predicted to be 32 billion barrels of oil and 84 trillion cubic feet of gas. The’ area, which has 160,000 kilometres of shore- line, is internationally ie He said Lancaster Sound is. the most productive area of. the Arctic for wildlife because it has six months of open water. Problems which could en- danger this wildlife, said Clarke, include gas or oil well blowouts, tanker accidents, Karel Spance. Maid of honor, Miss Sherry MacKenzie of Castlegar, was gowned in baby blue pleated lace, with sleeve- tlegar Legion Hall, where guests enjoyed a smorgas- bord dinner, prepared by the Legion Ladies Auxiliary. Highlighting the head ta: ble was the | three-tiered wedding caby, iced in whits, with aay re featuring a border of blue sweetpeas, roses and green leaves, Cen- tering the square bottom layer was Roman atatuette with a basket of, blue and white silk flowers. Statues groom beneath a bridal arch, graced the top. The cake had been decorated by Mrs. Ed Adams. Master of ceremonies was the bride’s uncle. Mr. Bert Molnar of Castlegar. The Bridal toast was presented by Mr. Francis Smitheram of Blueberry Creek. Tracey Adams was. in charge of the Feaaier, which guests signed using blue and white plume pens. ~ her was the bride's brother, Stacy Molnar. Following they recente ith music danced their first waltz to'a song\ by, Reo Speedwagon called “Keep on Loving You". a less jacket tied at the wa- Mrs. Baas ‘of baby! blue polyester with empire waistlin basket of white daisies with baby blue carnations ‘and green fern. Baby blue ribbon adorned the handles of the baskets. Their jewelry accents were: the hi Completing the wedding party were best man Mr. Ken Simonen and ushers Mr. Dan: and Mr. ‘Terry aysia’s natural have long been exploited by foreign developers. “Our own business com- munity and leaders abet this process of gobbling up re- sources at a rate much faster than regeneration can oc- cur,”’ said Singh. ‘The get- rich-quick and damn-the-fu- ture syndrome is unfortunat- ly deeply entrenched, even at the individual level.’’ He said ‘inadequate pol- pipeline and noise. The July 81. Provincial winning ticket number is 6651102. This ticket, with its itical will by bur- eaucractic and.other forms of has wins $600,000. A rizes are the Implementatioa | of effec- tive P' i $50,000 for the lest six digits; $1,000 for the last five digits; $100 for the last four digits: $25 for the last three digits and’ $10 ‘for the last two its. oe next draw takes place is Friday. legislation. vg Singh said the only sal- vation for the last remains. of Malaysia’s ‘‘tropical fron- tier” is to stop the exploit- atiori of natural resources at the local, national and inter- national level. In another paper pecuented at the congress, a Canadian scientist said it is very. ou “OF over 50 varieties FRIDAY, AUGUST 7 cult to — DEMO and TAPE ) SALE INCLUDING RECEIVER Sonsul, 65 500, 6OWX2, List $799.99... TURNTABLE EDS 25F, Retail $249.99, Trade in RECEIVER TURNTABLE ‘Akal Ap004, Fully Auto, Trade in........++++ Sy TAPE DECK Plus ‘Many More Savings (no reasonable offer refused) CASTLEGAR NEWS, Au: Major computer changes means more training Castlegar Savings Credit Union, a local financial in- stitution owned ‘by its members in the Castlegar and District and the Slocan Valley, along with all credit unions in British Columbia, is in the midst of a major computer change. Three employees, Richard Maddocks, office manager ing course in August. The new system, GEAC, will have many new and exciting features that the existing system could not P st 5, 198) WALTER Roe. 345-3250) Well cover it all.for you CASTS SALTY LID. Why Buy New | FURNITURE? Beant iit ae ‘LAUNDR The—‘Tough Ones” 5 THE PAIR “Drive A Little To Save A Lot’ Home Goods FURNITURE WAREHOUSE iChine Cc Y PAIR ash ‘n rinse temp. xclusive pumpgu Matching dryer with automatic.dry stop, on two settings.